Can the lack of interest in questions of Christianity and matters of religion merely be attributed to outdated theological and religious forms of speech? While creative reformulations of religious concerns promise a quick revitalization, Anne Katrin Stricker shows that we should accord priority to the interaction between language and experience – an interaction which she describes as the »practice of creative memory".

Can the lack of interest in questions of Christianity and matters of religion merely be attributed to outdated theological and religious forms of speech? While creative reformulations of religious concerns promise a quick revitalization, Anne Katrin Stricker shows that we should accord priority to the interaction between language and experience – an interaction which she describes as the »practice of creative memory".

Can the lack of interest in questions of Christianity and matters of religion merely be attributed to outdated theological and religious forms of speech? While creative reformulations of religious concerns promise a quick revitalization, Anne Katrin Stricker shows that we should accord priority to the interaction between language and experience – an interaction which she describes as the »practice of creative memory".